Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USA; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, 300 Longwood Avenue, Boston, MA, 02115, USA; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, 25 Shattuck Street, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
J Autoimmun. 2019 Jan;96:123-133. doi: 10.1016/j.jaut.2018.09.006. Epub 2018 Oct 8.
The incidence of type 1 diabetes (T1D) and some other complex diseases is increasing. The cause has been attributed to an undefined changing environment. We examine the role of the environment (or any changing non-genetic mechanism) in causing the rising incidence, and find much evidence against it: 1) Dizygotic twin T1D concordance is the same as siblings of patients in general; 2) If the environment is responsible for both the discordance among identical twins of patients with T1D and its rising incidence, the twin concordance rate should be rising, but it is not; 3) Migrants from high-to low-incidence countries continue to have high-incidence children; 4) TID incidence among the offspring of two T1D parents is identical to the monozygotic twin rate. On the other hand, genetic association studies of T1D have revealed strong susceptibility in the major histocompatibility complex and many optional additive genes of small effect throughout the human genome increasing T1D risk. We have, from an analysis of previously published family studies, developed a stochastic epigenetic Mendelian oligogenic (SEMO) model consistent with published observations. The model posits a few required recessive causal genes with incomplete penetrance explaining virtually all of the puzzling features of T1D, including its rising incidence and the specific low T1D incidence rates among first-degree relatives of patients. Since historic selection against any causal gene could prevent T1D, we postulate that the rising incidence is because of increasing population mixing of parents from some previously isolated populations that had selected against different causal genes.
1 型糖尿病(T1D)和一些其他复杂疾病的发病率正在上升。其病因被归因于未定义的环境变化。我们研究了环境(或任何变化的非遗传机制)在导致发病率上升中的作用,并发现了很多与之相悖的证据:1)同卵双胞胎 T1D 的一致性与患者的兄弟姐妹相同;2)如果环境对 T1D 患者同卵双胞胎之间的不一致及其发病率的上升都有责任,那么双胞胎的一致性比率应该上升,但实际上并没有;3)从高发病率国家移民到低发病率国家的人,他们的孩子仍然有高发病率;4)T1D 父母的后代的 TID 发病率与同卵双胞胎率相同。另一方面,T1D 的遗传关联研究揭示了人类基因组中主要组织相容性复合体和许多可选的、具有小效应的附加基因的强烈易感性,增加了 T1D 的风险。我们根据以前发表的家族研究进行了分析,提出了一个随机表观遗传孟德尔寡基因(SEMO)模型,该模型与已发表的观察结果一致。该模型假设了一些必需的隐性因果基因,其不完全外显率解释了 T1D 的几乎所有令人困惑的特征,包括其发病率上升和患者一级亲属中 T1D 的特定低发病率。由于历史上对任何因果基因的选择都可能预防 T1D,我们假设发病率的上升是由于来自某些先前隔离的人群的父母的人口混合增加,这些人群选择了不同的因果基因。